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So There Was This Today

~ An eclectic kaleidoscope of whatever tickles my fancy, makes me think, gives me pause, grabs my heart, gives me the giggles, or in any way hits me in the feels.

So There Was This Today

Tag Archives: fear-mongering

Dallas vs. Ebola pt. 6

20 Monday Oct 2014

Posted by 98maryanne in Government, Healthcare, Media, Politics, Texas

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

compassion, Dallas, Ebola, fear-mongering, media, State Fair of Texas, Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, Thomas Eric Duncan

There is much good news about Ebola and Dallas. First, some four dozen people who were in quarantine after having contact with Thomas Eric Duncan while he was ill are now through the quarantine period and have been cleared as being Ebola free. This number includes the four family members who lived with him for three or four days before he was hospitalized and were in the contaminated apartment for a couple of days after. From what I’ve read, it is a small apartment and was pretty harrowing before they were moved. And yet not one of them got sick. This should calm a lot of fears about how easy it is to catch Ebola, which is not very. Or at least it should, but listening to some of the people around here, who I thought were intelligent, well educated adults, I have some doubts about that. Sigh. Seriously people. Chill. Out.

The two nurses who were treating Mr. Duncan while he was most contagious and contracted Ebola have been moved to other hospitals with the capabilities to handle Ebola without further infecting healthcare workers. So there are no active cases of Ebola in Dallas at this time. There are 120 others being monitored, mostly those who also treated Mr. Duncan and the two nurses who are being monitored. Quarantines for that group will go as long as to November 7. I have no idea if it is a good sign that no one else has become symptomatic, but I choose to believe it is. People are not dropping like flies, even after treating someone ill with Ebola while protocols were not being followed. Again, Ebola is not that easy to catch.

The people who have been cleared, including Mr. Duncan’s family members, have zero chance of carrying the Ebola virus and need the community’s support and compassion, not fear and mistreatment. It is my hope that the Dallas community will rise to the occasion and welcome them back with open arms. I would hope that the hysterical levels of fear being seen in other communities, such as the school in Maine who put a teacher on 21 days leave (it better be paid!) because she was in Dallas at a conference 10 miles from Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, or a school in Ohio closing because a student was on an airplane with one of the nurses who later became ill will not be the norm for the people who have been cleared here in Dallas. I hope we can show the country and the world how to compassionately and humanely treat people who have been through such a harrowing experience and not treat them like lepers.

November 7th is eighteen days from now. If no one else becomes ill, Dallas will be completely Ebola free. If someone else does become ill, their contacts will have a 21 day period of quarantine. But, as is becoming increasingly clear, Dallas nor the United States has an outbreak or epidemic of Ebola. Stop watching and listening to the fear-mongering news shows trying to get ratings and the fear-mongering politicians trying to score political points. Below are two links to information about Ebola from the CDC and Dallas County Health and Human Services. Despite all of the idiots out there squalling that the government is lying to you about Ebola, these ARE good sources of information.

Ebola information link one

Ebola information link two

Today is an absolutely beautiful day here in Dallas. It is sunny and 80º. In fact we’ve had beautiful weather all month. That may have played into why The State Fair of Texas brought in $41 million in tickets sales, breaking the previous record of $33 million. Hmmm. Seems like most of the people of Dallas and it’s visitors have not been taken in by the fear-mongering after all. Good on you, Dallas!

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Dallas vs. Ebola pt. 5

15 Wednesday Oct 2014

Posted by 98maryanne in Government, Healthcare, Media, Politics, Texas

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

CDC, conservative, Dallas, Ebola, Facebook, fear, fear-mongering, healthcare workers, media, meme, nurses, President Obama, progressive, Texas, Thomas Eric Duncan

A second nurse who treated Thomas Eric Duncan has tested positive for Ebola. I’ve been being stupid again and reading comments on various news forums and Facebook and the amount of panic, fear-mongering and outright stupidity is staggering. And the finger pointing in all the wrong directions is mind-boggling. I did find this meme which cracked me up:

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So, who’s fault is it? Because as much as some people detest the man for their, of course, (snicker) non-racist beliefs of birtherism, socialism and any other -ism they throw at him and hope it sticks, this is not President Obama’s fault. And it wouldn’t matter if there were a Republican president right now, this is not one man’s fault. Whose fault it is cannot be pinned to one or even a couple of people. Believe me, there is lots and lots of fault to go around and there are a whole lot of people in this country who see part of the problem in the mirror every day but prefer to blame the President.

Let’s start with the state of Texas. How could a state be at fault? Well in case you hadn’t heard, Texas politics are deeply red (conservative). There are a whole lot of progressives in Texas working to change that and change will come, but not soon enough in this case. Texas is a “right to work” state. A conservative euphemism for union-busting, pro-corporation policies. What it means in the real world is take this job as is, or leave it. Speak out about problems or issues or low pay or hazardous working conditions and we can fire you with impunity. And you have absolutely no recourse to appeal. It breeds environments where all kinds of problems can occur. Remember that huge explosion at the fertilizer plant in West, TX that leveled half the town? Do you think the people that worked there didn’t know there were problems? Of course they did. But you’ve got to feed your family and keep a roof over their heads, so better to keep your mouth shut and keep your job. Hospitals are no different. This kind of policy breeds workplace cultures that punish whistleblowers and allows the companies behind them to make ever more profits. And hospitals in this country are for-profit ventures. More on that later. It is now coming to light that the nurses didn’t have the protective gear they needed, in fact they were told by hospital ADMINISTRATORS that face masks were unnecessary. Hospital ADMINISTRATORS, you know, the folks who balance the budget (I mean make sure there’s a tidy profit) told nurses they didn’t need protective masks to keep them safe from Ebola. Not to mention that there apparently was a shortage of needed gear in the first place. I mean, why keep a surplus of gear that would keep your staff safe in an emergency situation because, profits! [ETA: Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital stated in a press conference this morning that all CDC protocols were followed and that all protective gear was available for nurse’s use.] And let’s discuss the fact that Mr. Duncan was sent home with antibiotics the first time he went to the hospital. The hospital has been hemming and hawing, at first blaming Mr. Duncan for not telling them he was from Africa, then admitting they knew he was from Africa but blaming a nurse for not telling the doctor, then admitting a doctor knew but their computer system messed up etc. The fact is he was an uninsured black man in a deeply conservative southern state. If you haven’t figured out what I mean by that, I’ll point it out for you. He was black. Racism is still rampant in this country despite what the very people who are the most racist want you to believe. You know, the ones who start a racist rant by stating, “I’m not racist, but…” And he was uninsured, meaning it was unlikely the for-profit hospital would get paid. So despite the fact that they all knew where he was from and that his symptoms were consistent with Ebola they sent him home. He just wasn’t good for the hospital’s bottom line. And now we’re learning that even after he came back the second time and in spite of a head nurse’s increasing outrage, hospital ADMINISTRATORS didn’t want to put him in isolation. Bad for the bottom line, because that stuff’s expensive. It is the very policies that this state endorses and embraces that allow that kind of outrageous practices in a hospital. And if you vote for the politicians who endorse these kinds of policies, you are part of the problem of Ebola spreading in Texas.

Now would be a good time to talk about the healthcare system in this country. You know, the one conservatives crow about being the best in world. Well, maybe it is for the wealthy and a bit better for those with insurance. But even with insurance, it is really easy to be bankrupted by a bad accident or illness. The Affordable Care Act also known as Obamacare (or according to conservatives the single most horrific law ever enacted in the history of everything) has made insurance affordable and available to more people, keeps insurers from discriminating based on pre-existing conditions, keeps insurers from dropping people from the insurance when they get sick, and prevents insurers from putting caps on the amount of insurance a sick person can get. All of those are good starts in the right direction. The other big part of the ACA is the expansion of Medicaid to a lot more people. All the states have to do is accept money from the federal government to expand Medicaid in their states. Of course Texas being red (conservative) threw a hissy fit about taking more money from that (insert insult of choice here) in the White House and turned down that money leaving many thousands of people here still without insurance that otherwise would have qualified. Would Medicaid have covered Mr. Duncan since he was a visitor from another country? No, but if hospitals here were getting Medicaid for the uninsured they by law have to at least make an attempt at treating in the ER it would cut down on their costs and make it less likely they’d turn away a foreign national without insurance. At least it should. But there’s that bottom line to consider, so maybe not. And here’s the thing, because our hospital system in this country is for-profit, not for doing the morally right thing of treating any person with any illness, even people with insurance are screwed on a regular basis by doctors and hospitals who exploit the system to line their own pockets. So when you have a system that puts profits ahead of patient care, that put administrators in charge of treatments and mix that with an uninsured, minority patient it’s a recipe for disaster. And if you are one of those people who believe if all those low-income people would just quit being so lazy and work harder at those minimum wage jobs they could all just magically get better paying jobs that don’t exist and get their own insurance then you are part of the problem of Ebola spreading in Texas.

Now, lets move on to the CDC (Center for Disease Control). The CDC has been a presence in the media since Mr. Duncan was diagnosed and have been doing their job of attempting to keep the populace calm. And that is an important job. Have you ever seen a herd of animals stampeding? Have you ever seen a large group of panicking humans? About the same. Of course, most people in the comments I’ve been reading think the CDC is just lying to them about how hard it is to spread Ebola and everyone is at risk!!!! But seriously people. Mr. Duncan’s family members, who spent days with him while he was sick with symptoms and who then spent more days in the contaminated apartment before they were moved have not gotten sick and are past the most likely timeframe for getting sick. They still have a few days of quarantine left, but each day that passes they have less likely a chance of getting it. The two people who have contracted it had daily extensive contact with Mr. Duncan when he was the most ill and contagious. They clearly did not have the resources or training to be safe and that is partially on the CDC and partially on the hospital, but to believe the CDC is lying about how easy it is to get Ebola is to not understand the science. Oh wait, conservatives and science don’t mix. The CDC has also sent personnel to help the hospital and city of Dallas with their response. Since the diagnoses of the 2nd nurse to have contracted Ebola, they have admitted they should have sent a much larger presence to Texas to help. Well, how in the world can we trust the CDC when they would screw up so badly? Well, lets talk funding. Remember the sequester? You know, when conservatives held the government hostage, shut it down unless it got draconian austerity measures passed? And President Obama relented thinking he could manage to work with Republicans and then sequestration went into effect because of course Republicans weren’t going to work with the (insert insult of choice here) in the White House. Well guess which budget got huge cuts? You guessed it, the CDC (along with everything else except the military). And we’re not just talking about the resources to send personnel to Texas. The CDC goes to other countries to help them with outbreaks that occur. To keep them from spreading. So that they don’t spread to this country. The best way to keep diseases like Ebola from spreading to this country is to keep them from spreading in other countries. But if the CDC doesn’t have the resources to help do that, it is inevitable that something will start to spiral out of control and it will hit here. Which is what has happened with Ebola. And let’s not forget everyone’s favorite armchair solution: ban all flights into this country from Africa. IT WILL NOT WORK FOLKS. You ban all flights from certain African countries, people who need to get here will just fly into another country and then fly here. The only way to would be to stop ALL flights into this country. Do you think the US economy not to mention world economy could handle that? The other thing I’ve heard from the panicked masses is to close the borders of the countries who have people infected by Ebola. OK. Whose going to close the borders of 3 or 4 large countries? Our military? If that were even possible, which it is not, that would put thousands and thousands of American servicemen in contact with Ebola. If President Obama ordered American troops into 4 countries to forcibly try and control their borders, then I might think he’s as awful as conservatives believe. And it wouldn’t work. There would be no way to completely stop people from coming or going across borders as we here in border states understand. You’d think all the panicked conservatives would get it too since they constantly whinge about our porous borders. The best way to stop the current outbreak is to make sure there are enough resources and personnel both in the countries with outbreaks and here at home and that will mean spending money. Congress should immediately reinstate previous budgets and add as much more as is needed. But they won’t. And they’ll blame Obama and so will all the other conservatives out there who refuse to understand how the real world works.

So, OH MY GOD, EBOLA!! WHAT SHOULD WE DO!! WE HAVE TO DO SOMETHING!! WE HAVE TO BLAME SOMEBODY!!! Well, I’m glad you asked. Here’s what to do. First, calm the f*ck down. If you want to worry about something, worry about how 88 people A DAY die from gun violence in this country. I will repeat that. 88 people A DAY die from gun violence in this country. That is nearly 31,000 people a year. And the conservative wing nuts are just fine with that because “my right to own as many and every kind of gun there is with no restrictions trumps your right to be alive.” You want to be furious and up in arms about something? How about that? Next, how about the fact…no wait. Never mind. If you truly care about what is going on in the world and wish to stay informed you either already educate yourself or are capable of looking up and confirming everything I’ve stated in this piece. If you want to stay true to your ideology, your fear, your hatred of those who are different or “other”, if you want to believe that you are better than anyone else for whatever reason, then nothing I say here will change your mind. You won’t get that opinion is not equal to fact, that ideology is not equal to science, that your worldview is not the end all and be all. You’ll just stay fearful and angry and continue to vote for and support policies that seek to exclude and denigrate and keep downtrodden those “others”. The good news is that progressive ideals have ALWAYS won in the end. People who believe in the sanctity of ALL life, not just those of unborn fetuses, people who believe resources are there for ALL people no matter their circumstances, people who believe war-mongering is not the way to a peaceful world, people who believe science can advance our civilization and make life better for EVERYONE, those people and their ideals will prevail. So I will continue to stay optimistic that despite mistakes being made, despite a lack of resources, despite the greed and opportunism of so many in this country, this outbreak (if it can really be called that at this point) will be contained as will the real one in Africa. Lessons will be learned that will help doctors and scientists deal with the next one. And life will go on.

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Dallas vs. Ebola Pt. 2

07 Tuesday Oct 2014

Posted by 98maryanne in Media, Texas

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Colbert Report, Dallas, Ebola, fear-mongering, humor, Rachel Maddow, Stephen Colbert

In my original post Dallas vs. Ebola I pointed out the panic I was noticing over the fact that Ebola was in Dallas, as well as my observation that I believed Dallas and it’s people are more than capable of handling the situation. In my next post Media and The Politics of Fear I pointed out the fear-mongering of much of the media and my absolute disgust with that. Well I’m happy to report that not all of the media is engaging in the insanity. Check out the below segment of the Colbert Report as Stephen Colbert, in his usual hilarious manner, mocks the fear-mongering media with about as much disgust as I’ve ever seen peek through his “persona”. You’ll have to scroll down mid-page in the article to find the clip: The Colbert Report clip

Next check out this segment of the Rachel Maddow show that shows the compassionate, measured response of the team here in Dallas as well as Ms. Maddow’s usual calm and measured demeanor.  The Rachel Maddow show clip

If you are willing to dig a little, look past the mainstream media and be open-minded you can still find good reporting and truth in the media. It is a bit disconcerting that two satire shows, The Colbert Report and The Daily Show are my go to places for truth in the news. However, a study by Pew Research shows those two show’s viewers rank first in knowledge of national and international affairs while Fox News viewer rank last.  That said, if you get all of your news from one or two sources you are probably not getting the full picture. Always, always, always, get as much information from as many sources as you can before you take anything you hear as gospel.

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Media and The Politics of Fear

03 Friday Oct 2014

Posted by 98maryanne in Media, Politics

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Dallas, Ebola, fear-mongering, inequality, propaganda

The politics of fear is not a new idea. Google that phrase and you’ll see what I mean. As I wrote about in my last post, Dallas has the dubious distinction of having the first case of Ebola diagnosed in the United States. I also mentioned in that post that I stay away from TV media most of the time. I find it tiresome, not very informative and in many cases nothing but propaganda. Curiosity has gotten the better of me and I’ve taken a peek at the coverage of the Ebola case here in Dallas. The level of near hysteria over this so far ONE case of Ebola would be laughable if it weren’t so disgusting. And it is disgusting, on so many levels. The media coverage of Ebola in Dallas is fear mongering at it’s worst. Everything, from the hosts and pundits overwrought demeanor, to the headlines, the graphics and the news crawls are carefully crafted to let everyone who watches know that this is not just a serious story but that they are in serious danger. While the news shows bring on experts to explain Ebola and the (almost non-existent) risks of anyone here catching it, I’ve watched anchors and pundits actually question them repeatedly, challenge them on the science and hint through their facial expressions, body language and words that the experts are not to be trusted. Giant headlines flash across the screen EBOLA IN AMERICA, with ambulances and hospitals in the background, while ominous music plays. Today, the CDC sent in cleaners to clean the apartment where the victim stayed and to remove any biological hazard. There have been three news helicopters circling the area all day. Three. To catch a hazmat team clean one apartment and get more footage of rooftops and parking lots. I tried to show in a humorous way in my last post the fear that many people have over this. But the truth is, there are a lot of people who are truly terrified that they are at risk of getting Ebola. There are a lot of people who truly believe the government is lying to them about the risks or the number of cases. They don’t hear the dry and boring reassurances of doctors and other experts on infectious disease. But the headlines, flashing lights, ambulances, red, red, red graphics and the near frantic skepticism of their favorite news anchors is branded into their consciousness.

Why do most of the media behave in this way? Why terrify so many people in this way? Why make people believe they are at high risk of dying from a disease that actually poses almost no risk, but rarely even mention the real threats to American’s health? It’s not just Ebola. Terrorists are practically at our doorsteps, ready to kill as many of us as possible! Except you are more likely to be killed by a toddler than a terrorist. Why does the media do it? One word. Propaganda. It’s so much easier to keep the populace frightened by real and terrifying but actually low risk threats, when you don’t want their attention on the status quo that you have a vested interest in maintaining. Six corporations control 90% of the media. And who owns those six mega-corporations? The very wealthy. And why would the very wealthy want everyday Americans worried about Ebola and terrorists and every other crisis of the week rather than the very real problems this country faces? Because they don’t want them to wake up to the looting of income from the bottom 99% of the population to the top 1%. Income inequality is monster in the closet they’re trying to distract us from. And scaring the living daylights out of everyone isn’t the only trick up their sleeves. The media is guilty of propagating a false equivalence in everything from politics to science. If just as much attention is given to both sides, a whole lot of people are going to believe both sides are valid. If politicians are allowed to go on air and lie with impunity all while getting nothing more than a serious nod or maybe once in a while a mild “are you sure?”, a whole lot of people are going to believe those lies. And the the other trick up the media’s sleeve is to keep the populace divided. A divided populace is way less likely to unite for major change. The media is a master at the us vs. them game. The media uses politics, racial tension and moral issues, among others, to keep us angry at each other instead of at their masters.

How do we fight back against propaganda? Never take information at face value. I’ve always been very curious and very eager to learn new things. If someone tells me something I didn’t know, my reaction is to say, “that’s interesting” and then do as much research as I can to figure it out for myself. Sometimes I find out what was said is true, sometimes bogus and sometimes incomplete. But I then know the truth for myself. I also know that so many, many people take whatever is said to them at face value. And if it is from someone they trust, whether a relative or religious leader or news anchor, it is taken as gospel to be defended to their last breath. I don’t get that at all and I never will. We are so lucky in this country to have the right to learn things for ourselves and to dissent if we don’t agree, which of course is a right the media is working to demonize. I’m not sure what it will take to wake up the average American to the fact that our democracy and our rights are being eroded away by a very wealthy few and their politician and media puppets, while we fight amongst ourselves, fearing everything except the truth of what’s happening. Knowledge is power. Don’t give up yours.

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